22 NOVEMBER. 



COMPOST FOR RANUNCULUS. 



This same compost will answer remarkably well, 

 but that it may be advisable to place the roots on a 

 stratum, one inch deep, of unmanured rotted sod, or 

 other very good fresh earth. 



Plant in rows, nine inches apart, and place the 

 roots at four inches distant in the rows, and two 

 inches deep. 



COMPOST FOR ANEMONES. 



Precisely the same compost may be used, omitting 

 the stratum of rotted sod, and the same depth and 

 distances accurately observed as with the Ranuncu- 

 lus ; the spring crop, planted in March, generally 

 succeeds that of November, closely. 



NARCISSUS. 



May be planted in good loamy soil, dug two spades 

 deep, and mixed with about one-eighth of hot-bed 

 manure, well rotted. They should be planted in 

 rows, at nine inch intervals ; six inches apart in the 

 row, and six inches deep. 



DOUBLE JONQUILS. 



Should be treated in the same manner as the Nar- 

 cissus, in every particular. In one point, however, 



